Rare Lone Neutron Star Found Nearby 37
F4_W_weasel sends us to the BBC for news of the eighth lone neutron star ever discovered. It has no associated supernova remnant, binary companion, or radio pulsations. It's in our stellar neighborhood, at most 1,000 light years away. The object emits all its radiation (as far as wa can detect with current instruments) in X rays. The object is called Calvera, after the bad guy in The Magnificent Seven — which is itself the collective nickname for the seven such objects previously known.
Dragon's Egg (Score:3, Interesting)
When I saw the title I was hoping for a Robert L. Forward Dragon's Egg [wikipedia.org] type of thing. But apparently it isn't quite that nearby.
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Perhaps with a hyperdrive motor? (Score:2)
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Raw data (Score:4, Insightful)
Makes me wonder how much data has been colected, but not analyzed, and what other astronomical wonders and oddities will be found when that data is analyzed.
Re:Raw data (Score:4, Interesting)
Once MIT gets their glass plate collection on-line, expect even more discoveries.
-nB
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data collection), but there is no limit to the ways that things can be analyzed (did it change strenght with time ? Is it in other catalogs ? Is it stronger
in some wavelength than usual ? etc. etc.) So, in that sense the surface has hardly been scratched and this work will literally never be completed.
There is lots of room for amateurs to make disc
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Rasberry! (Score:2, Funny)
I want a little piece of it... (Score:2, Funny)
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See, the problem is you're asking for it volumetrically. You need to ask for it terms of mass, as usually expressed in LOC (Libraries of Congress). This is NOT to be confused with the the ECLOC (Entire Contents of the Library of Congress), which is a data throughput metric. No, we're talking about the mass of the actual masonry, furnishings, and plumbing. The mass of the staff is only taken into account under special ci
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Hardly news... (Score:3, Funny)
Most websites I go to extol their collection of rare, lone(ly) stars near me, and even offer to put me in direct contact with them. Take that SETI.
How certain are they about the radio noise? (Score:3, Informative)
There are also other variants of these objects - magnetars, for example - that are, if not well-known, then at least recognized and classified.
To decide this could be something totally new is an interesting decision but nothing in the press release is telling me why they have made that specific decision over, say, merely seeing a regular pulsar at too great an angle to ever see the pulses.
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May be an age thing. If the object is young enough that the remnant is still nearby and visible, it's young enough that it hasn't yet shed a lot of energy through its pulsar (etc) emissions, and vice versa. An old neutron star whose remnant nebula is long gone is likely to be a slow, feeble pulsar at best.
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While true I don't think it's exactly all that interesting that you'd find a neutron star without the remnants. There are many things that could have happened to eject such an object out of its normal position. Take a binary star system for example. If one star lost significant mass, and another gained (mass blown off of its partner) than an irregular orbit would cause the first
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Re:How certain are they about the radio noise? (Score:5, Informative)
could be an off-axis pulsar (Score:3, Informative)
None of the known radio pulsars are closer to Earth than that.
Cheers,
renard / Derek Fox
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BTW: why "renard'?
Am I just being apathetic? (Score:2)
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For you? No point at all. Convenient that you aren't being asked to do any of the analysis then, isn't it?
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Because it's HEADING STRAIGHT FOR US!!!
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I Learned Something New From TFA (Score:2)
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